This article discusses how a performed drama based on a narrative inquiry into the lived experience of women casual academics in Australian universities is understood by an audience. The audience, principally comprised of casual and ongoing academics, described the drama as authentic and personally recognised many of the main scenarios and preoccupations re-presented. In particular, they identified that the drama’s re-presentation of casual academics’ feelings of insecurity, precarious collegial relationships, and a lack of belonging and voice strongly resonated with them. The presentation also provoked them to communicate their own lived experiences of academia, which constituted a second set of narrative data. Moreover, when the audience ...
© 2009 Dr. David Robin Kelman.This thesis examines the relationship between narrative and meaning in...
We are four women from three Australian universities in various phases of (un)becoming academics. On...
We are four women from three Australian universities in various phases of (un)becoming academics. On...
In this PhD dissertation I present an account of a person-centred, feminist research project that ex...
An original theatre piece based on the interviews of six women casual academics from across three di...
How we reach, engage with, and inform/transform our research audience depends on the medium of commu...
The form of research communication is an integral aspect of the research process and not merely a po...
This paper discusses a research project that aims to address the binary/irony of the central physica...
This book presents the research journey involved in sensitively unearthing and re-presenting the liv...
Is ‘slow scholarship’ feasible in the competitive context of academic careers where managerialism, s...
Having previously established the ‘binary/irony of the central physical and teaching space that wome...
Is ‘slow scholarship’ feasible in the competitive context of academic careers wheremanagerialism, se...
Despite educational research ‘steerage’ that directs funding and energy towards positivist approache...
Qualitative research is said to add flesh to the bones of quantitative data, and narrative inquiry, ...
This article explores the social, cultural, and emotional learning that occurred when drama was used...
© 2009 Dr. David Robin Kelman.This thesis examines the relationship between narrative and meaning in...
We are four women from three Australian universities in various phases of (un)becoming academics. On...
We are four women from three Australian universities in various phases of (un)becoming academics. On...
In this PhD dissertation I present an account of a person-centred, feminist research project that ex...
An original theatre piece based on the interviews of six women casual academics from across three di...
How we reach, engage with, and inform/transform our research audience depends on the medium of commu...
The form of research communication is an integral aspect of the research process and not merely a po...
This paper discusses a research project that aims to address the binary/irony of the central physica...
This book presents the research journey involved in sensitively unearthing and re-presenting the liv...
Is ‘slow scholarship’ feasible in the competitive context of academic careers where managerialism, s...
Having previously established the ‘binary/irony of the central physical and teaching space that wome...
Is ‘slow scholarship’ feasible in the competitive context of academic careers wheremanagerialism, se...
Despite educational research ‘steerage’ that directs funding and energy towards positivist approache...
Qualitative research is said to add flesh to the bones of quantitative data, and narrative inquiry, ...
This article explores the social, cultural, and emotional learning that occurred when drama was used...
© 2009 Dr. David Robin Kelman.This thesis examines the relationship between narrative and meaning in...
We are four women from three Australian universities in various phases of (un)becoming academics. On...
We are four women from three Australian universities in various phases of (un)becoming academics. On...